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l QUICK RELIEF FROM Get fif.vfié@lard s Olive Tablets That is the joyful ry of thousands sin covered the formula for Olive T treating patients for chronic and torpld livers Zdwards' Ollve Tablets do not co o, but a healing, soothing ves: table lnxative constipatio No griping s the sugar-coated, o the never you have and then—a tng~-nick headache—torpid liver and a constipated, you'll find quick, sure and on pleasant results from one or two lfttle I ‘keynote" e arle brown mouth’ Tdwards' Olive Tablets at bedtims, Thousands take one or two every it to keep right, Try them. 10c an per box, Al druggists. The Ollye Tablet Company, Coluinbus, SUGGESTION: Antic. ipate your Nemo needs before prices advance, WISE WOMEN KNOW WHY! EMO No. 403 was the first corset made with Nemo Relief Bands, It dates back to 1905—of course it has been im. proved since. Thousands of women have worn No. 403 all these years, and will wear no other. Does No, 403 need further endorsement? SELF-REDUCING No. 403 is for women of full figure, flesh well distributed, Relief Bands take up, support and reduce a heavy abdomen. Elastio gores in back of skirt. Coutil or batiste, sizes 22 to 36—$4.00. No. 402 is similar, but for short full figures. No. 405 is for tall full figures—$4.00. Every Nemo is an extra value simply as a corset. For the health features, which are priocless, you pay nothing extra, CONSTIPATION co a4 Oltve Tabloets, the on ne 0 of thess lit- olive-colored tablets, They wels and liver to act normally. to unnatural aotion. now ath—a dull, tired feel. re ly r ht 0. Good Stores Everywhere $3.00, $4, $5 and up Newe Hygiontc-Fochion Lustitute, New York Be Careful in Using Soap in Your Hair HERE'S A NEW WAY TO MANI YOUR FEET GLAD '| Kansas City Film BRIEF CITY NEWS “Townsend's for Sporting Goods." Lighting Fixtures—Burgess-Grandon Diamond Engagement Kings—Edholm. Have Root Print It—Now Beacon Press Fire, tornado, automoblile, burglary in. surance. J. H. Dumont, Keeline Bldy. “Today's Movie Program,” classifisd tion today. It appears in The Bee exclu- sively. Find out what the various moving pleture theaters offer, woo- Two Seek Divorce—Atha M. Weise asks & divorce from Clarence on grounds of cruelty, She also wants her maiden name of Holoway restored. Anna wi di- vorce from Fred Lavin, churging t New Telephone Directory—The Nebrasks Tolephone company will begin next Thurs. day to 54,000 new telephone direc- torles to cover the period of June to Hep tember Thers will be two car- loads of books in the shipment Andirons, Fire Sereens—~Sunderiand's. Use “Tex-Tile" Shingles. Sunderland's. inclusive Man Shows Figures On the Industry Lee D. Balsly, a live wire in the | moving picture game in Kansas City and the southwest, swept down upon | Omaha yesterday from es Moines, where he was one of the principal speakers hefore the conven- tion of the Jowa Motion Picture league Besides making an address in the morning at a meeting of the Photo- play Managers’ association and Omaha Screen club at the Hotel Rome, Mr. Balsly found time to visit the majority of ({n- local theaters and renew his acquaintance with several Omaha advertising men. The Missouri film man is always eager to reverse the “show me” for- mula, being always ready to do most of the showing himself. He has moving picture statistics at his tongue's end and can produce facts to show that Nero's little Ro- man bonfire was a tame affair com- pared to some of the thrills pro- duced in the features he represents, “Did you know that there are more than 300,000 people employed in the moving picture busihess and that 35,000 of them are actors; and do you know that there is over $500,000,000 tied up in the business in this coun- try; and that there are 21,000 moving picture theaters in the United States taking in weekly paid admissions to the amount of §12,600,000, which to- tal up to over $655200,000 a year?” asked Mr. Balsly Mr. Balsly is with the publicity de- artment of the Kansas City Feature ?"xlm company, distributor of Para- mount pictures. Will Not Appoint New Union Pacific Head Until June While no one in Omaha knows to a certainty, it is not believed that the successor to President Mohler of the Union Pacific will be named un- | til the middle of June. A special meeting of the directors of the Union Pacific and the execu- tive committee is to be held the last of this week or the first of next in the New York offices, but it is not thought that the appointment of a new president will come up. The opinion prevails that the appointment will be deferred until the regular meeting, set for June 16, In the meantime President Mohler is as ac- tive as ever in the management of the affairs of the road, He has gone on a trip over the western lines. (rirl Choked to Death By Rejected Suitor Aurora, I1l., May 25.—~Gwendolin, a 15-year-old daughter of Mrs. Anna Collins, was found dead in her home here last night, and Jack Armstrong, 19 years old, the police say, has con- fessed that he choked her to death through jealousy. Beside the body was found a cup of poison, which the boy said he intended to take himself | had not his nerve failed him | Armstrong, whose real name is said to be Verhoye, is said to have at-| tempted to pursue his courtship after | | the girl had tired of him Mrs. Collins found the body of her | daughter lying on a couch in an un-| |used room of her boarding house, | The room was locked and the keys| were in the locks on the outside Upon information from Mrs. Collins, Armstrong was arrested a short time | afterward ‘Lawsuit Over Dog | Proving Expensive When an automobile owned by the Joens Car Ipany atapulted | Surex,” an airedale dog canine | paradise several months ag Nort} wenty-fourth street, litigation was started whic | cost even more| *|than $1,000 before The dog w as appealed a s now be ] ed again belore a jury Judge . . Two lawyers are re sined each side and o st of esses has been called he value of the dog was placed at $10x 18 owner TWO YOUNG OMAHA LADS MISSING FOR TWO DAYS T ande w . wa " . . sl ate . ‘e Bowel Complaints i India | need never hesitate to THE YELLOW PINE NOW IN THE SAND HILLS Woodruff Ball Tells of the Valuable Trees Which Are on the Forest Reserves. MANY ACRES ARE PLANTED Western yellow pine, valuable for lumber, is now being grown on the national forests of the Nebraska, the planted thousands upon thousands of sand hills of where government trees some years ago, according to Woodruff Ball, secretary of the state forestration commission, Omaha from Valentine attending the convention of the State Association of Commercial clubs For a number of thought nothing could be grown but | jackpine. But now, Mr. Ball reports western yellow pine has been set out with apparent success and all trees | are doing well | “Last yedr another 800 acres was | set out in timber by the government,” said Mr. Ball, which now makes a total of about 3,000 acres in the Bes sey reserve, formerly known as the Halsey reserve, near Halsey, Neb The oldest plantations of the jackpine are now from twelve to thirteen years old, and the oldest of the western yel low pine are about ten years old Jack Pine for Fence Posts. “The idea is that when the jack pine is about fifteen or twenty years | old it can be cut for fence posts. This will hrinr some revenue, and then | there will be the western yellow pine | left to develop into timber to be cut | for lumber. It is wonderful what has been accomplished in those sandhills in this matter of forestration. Peo- ple were slow to take hold of it at first, but it is now going to prove a wonderful thing.” A new government nursery has been provided for in Cherry county known as the Niobrar nursery. The first seeds were rllnled this year This nursery will have a capacity of 800D WORK FOR SICK WOMEN The Woman's Medicine Has Proved Its Worth. When Lydia E. Pinkham’s remedies were first introduced, their curative powers were doubted and had to be proved. But the proof came, and grad- ually the use of them spread over the whole country. Now that hundreds of thousands of women have experienced the most beneficial effects from the use of these medicines, their value has be- come generally recognized, and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the standard medicine for women. The following letter is only one of the thousands on file in the Pinkham office, at Lynn, Mass., proving that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound is an article of great merit as shown by the results it produces. Anamosa, lowa. — ‘“When I began tak- ing Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound I suffered with a displacement, and my system was in & general run- down conditfon. 1would have the head- ache for a week and my back would ache so bad when 1 would bend down I could hardly straighten up. My sister was sick in bed for two months and doctored, but did not get any relief. She saw an advertisement of your med~ cine and tried it and got better. She told me what it had done for her, and when I had taken only two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound my head began to feel better. I continued its use and now I don't havae any of those troubles.”” — Mrs. L. J. HANNAN, R.F.D. 1, Anamosa, lowa. ] | Resinol Stops Itching at Once who is in years it was —— It is & positive fact that the moment Kes inol Ointment touches any itching skin, the | ftehing usually stops and healing begins. | Unless the trouble is due to some serious internal condition, it quickly elears away all trace of ecsema, ringworm, pimples, or sim And the best of It is you \lar tormenting, unsig eruption, leaving the clear and healthy use Resinel Soap and Reainol ointment. There is nothing to injure the tenderest surfase. Resin I & doetor's preseript whieh twanty years has been used slelans in Areating skin affeot proseribe Resinel frealy, knowing that . healing action in oM o b band and ge " ot delisate on of & Uy baby. Bvery druge selle Resinal Boap and Reainel Otnime Bamples free, Dot 30K, Resinel, Baht mere, Md Hairs Quickly Vanish After this Treatment 1 | Monss Badios * A M W A p W Gestismes, ¢ P B P & ‘ VICTOR BERGONIE METHOD | r FLESH REDUCING A\l ANY A Fhone B a4 L3S O W By BEE : 1916. MAY 26 ‘ of getting the sandhills under| FRED BALLARD IS VISITING OMAHA, FRIDAY, Ballard has achieved about one nillion trees a year New Yo while the Halsey nursery has a ca-|forestration considera success and recognition pacity of about 1,500,000 irees a year.| Mr. Ball of the forestration com OLD ASSOCIATES HERE |with the plays he has written. A There are 125,000 ucres in the Nio- |Mission spoke to the conventi _— number of them have had very satis- o Rt eathrve e 00 | state commercial club men in ( Fred Ballird, Nebraska boy, now|factory runs in New York ‘and ) restration of the ndhills.” RS Lot y ougho e ea )ne of the s Besaey re on “Forestration of the Sandhills. o o throughout the east ] a\rlr‘\ in the l‘( y 4 ke i playwright of New York, is visiting best known of his plays was “Believe The name Bessey was given to the with friends and old college associ- [yfe* ¥ N ok coowtud Wik reserve at Halsey, in h o the Colds Need Attention lRtas i Omehin'’ He will be & tha v-l‘{‘.\‘-u;:’v;]vlp_r.l”:\“v\:f‘:: l«rltil“m: ide late Dean Charles E. Besse ead of | Your cold noeds Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar- |city for several days. Mr, and Mrs, | *0¢ TVOTanie comment . the department of botany and for-|Honey; it euts phiegm, kille germa, Ballard recently came out from New | General Sir John Maxwsll, who has been estry at the University of Nebraska, |the cough. Only 2%e. 80l by all darug-| York to visit Mr. Ballard's parents |§lven supreme conirol in Irsund Gorng the who was the father of the original | gleta.~Advertisemont at Havelock, Neb. Since going to|as a boxer in his younger days [ e o e S———SE———-— the new Encyclopaedia Britannica when 1t first appeared in 1768 In the 148 years since, the public has paid over OO0 Million Dollars! : for a total of over a million sets The Huge Outlay Involved (The eleven editions which have appeared at regular intervals throughout the last 148 years have cost more to produce than any other ten works (of reference or anything else) in any fan- guage and more than any twenty other works published in English. The English Dictionary of National Bi has now reached its seventieth volume. e German Encyclopaedia of Ersch and Gruber, be- un more than a century ago and still incnmp‘ato, a8 ‘puued ity 99th volume, The New English Dictionary, still incomplete, has cost a huge sum, though largely a labor of love. The Century Die- tionary, the greatest work of its kind mpub shed in America, has cost to date more than a million dollars ; and there are other large works of ref- erence in French, German, Spanish and Russian. - And the Encyclopaedia Britannica has cost more than the ten largest of these together.) The Encyclopaedia Britannica has an amazing history. Outside of the English Bible and Shakespeare it has been the most widely sold work ever published in any language. No other werk, in any language, has been continually published for a century and a half. On no other work have such enormous sums been spent for editorial preparation and for articles. No other work in the world’s history has ever en- listed the services of so many famous men. Of no other work of reference have more than a million sets with a total of more than twenty million volumes been sold, The eleven editions have been read and used, it is safe to say, by more than 100 million people; and possibly two or three times this number. This is history, Still more astonishing has been the success of the latest edition. Although the original outlay for the latest edition (a million and a half of dollars) was such that the price per set ranged from $125 to $250, more than 75,000 copies have already .bccn sold; that is of the New 11t Edition - the public has already paid $14,000,000 for the copyrighted A Long Sweep of Time The beginnings of the Encxclupnedil Britannica go back to & world which would seem to us very strange—a time when there were few stage coaches even in England and very few in America; when the first modest steam engines of Watt were beginning to make England the great coal-producing country of the earth, and her industrial empfie was bein founded upon the discovery of a way to sme iron with this same coal. George III was King and the greater Pitt— Lord Chatham—was Prime Minister. George Washington, Jefferson, John Adams, were then little known leaders of the English Colo- nies which sparsely settled the eastern shore of America, _The nnl{ American of European fame was Benjamin Franklin, Link-boys with torches still lighted the entry through the murky streets of London. chndl«- was the most brilliant light that any king in Europe could boast. Most people in the Colonies wore homespun clothes. Terrible epi- demics were frequent; sanitation was almost unknown and highway robberies abounded in all the countries of Europe. A voyage to America required from six to ten weeks, or more; shipwrecks were many and a great number died en route from scurvy and other diseases The Golden Age The Encyclopaedia Britannica, in its 148 years of existence, has seen and chronicled almost all the great inventions and discoveries which have made the modern world what it is. It was born two years after Watt took out his first patents for the steam engine, and while the spinnin, i’enny and power loom were being perfected. ts successive editions have described the rise of England’s great manufacturing industry and then that of Europe and America; the first loco- motives of Stevenson; the first steamboats of Fulton the first steamshipstocrossthe Atlantic; the building of the Great Eastern; the laying of the first Atlantic cable; Whitney's invention of the cotton gin; Elias Howe's sewing machine; McCormick’s reapersand mowers; Sir Humphry Davy's electric light and Faraday’s momentous discovery of machine-made electricity; the first dynamos; the first electricmotors; Morse’stele- graph; Bell'stele hune;thndeve{opmenlnhbe modern piano and the mechanical piano-player; the phonograph and its wonders; the wireless telegraph and wireless telephone; the motor car; the aeroplane; the multiplex printing machines which grind out newspapers at the rate of 100,000 an hour—In brief, all the modern mar vels of human ingenuity which have banished famine from civilized lands and made this the ;‘u-hul and most interesting period of human Istory. The Britannica’s Part The Encycluopnedn Britannica has chroni- cled all this prdgress, been contemporaneous with it. But it has been more than that ; it has dee{)l contributed to this progress. We know that far back it was the reading of articles on Electricity and Chemistry in the Fourth Edition of the Britannica which turned the mind of Faraday to scientific research. It was the articlesof Thomas Thomson in the Third Edition which made known the ideas of John Dalton which were the foundation of modern chem- istry. The ideas of Malthus and of James Mill and many other great thinkers first found popular exposition in the Britannica. All the notable men of science, scholars, and men of letters from the days of Sir Walter Scott and }’la'{lhir, Thos. Youn, 0 and Lord Jeffrey down e present time have been contributors to ive editions. And many of its longer articles uently been published in book form. l the most brilliant writers the English race Many of all produced, Lord Macawday, Deuulnc;(, Huxley, Arnold, the poet Swinburne, Lord Morley, Lo ephen obert Louls Stevenson, and Sir Leslle ave contributed notable articles, The Britannica has bee still remains not merely » vast repository of knowledge, but it has a distingulshed place in English litorature as well. And never was this true in a higher degree than in the new Eleventh Edition, which has brought together contributions of more thy 1500 of the best-lnformed minds now living. Yet with :lllI its erudition, stybe, the Britannica prac. tical work for omen of to-day. cholarship, its brilliant lite one the less first and forem yday use by the busy men & the cost of the To make up Now larger-sized your mind weeks at Cambridge about them (and return University Issue youmay take I not eatis- factory) No Time to Lose A 1530-.PAGE BOOK FREE ‘.. remarkal nweas fering can last y‘.ll 1\'.1‘;:".': :‘:‘: UL AN " “ .‘, -‘:::‘I:::j: Y b | 4 J oo vies, olover din ¥ W ewalente AW materia sken it (mpoasible FARDIA BRITANNICA adva ver W than 8 § ' boa ' - . 2 Goaw 1 Sews ' L of the BRITAN The publishers notity us that afer the sels now b e ol ke by S on hand are sxhausied they cannol supply sny et} v R vt viveg + Ro By more al the present low prices - e BRITA Sets mav be seen and orders left at Sears, Noebuck tad Co Chicago mad we posd Book of W CUT OUT AND MAIL TODAY Flaans + e ing the woabia Wiken slon " Pt Ottes Stroet vod Number